Everything about Swung Note totally explained
In
music, a
swung note or
shuffle note is a
rhythmic device in which the duration of the initial
note in a pair is
augmented and that of the second is
diminished. Also known as "
notes inégales", swung notes are widely used in
jazz music and other jazz-influenced music such as
blues and
Western swing. A
swing or
shuffle rhythm is the
rhythm produced by playing repeated pairs of notes in this way.
Lilting can refer to swinging, but might also indicate
syncopation or other subtle ways of interpreting and shaping musical time.
In
dance,
swing or
shuffle time or
rhythm is music whose
meter is that of
common time played with a swing. It may be written as
simple time and played
with a swing, or as
compound time and played as written. See
transcribing swing rhythms below.
In jazz, the verb "to
swing" is also used as a term of praise for playing that has a strong rhythmic
"groove" or drive. See also
swing (genre) for the 1930s-1940s jazz style, and
swing (dance) for styles of dance from that same era.
Types
In some
jazz music, especially of the
big band era, there's a convention that pairs of written eighth notes are not played equally--as the notation would otherwise be understood--but with the first longer than the second. The first note of each of these pairs is often understood to be twice as long as the second, implying a quarter note-eighth note
triplet feel, but in practice the difference is rarely that pronounced (see "amount of swing," below). This is an assumed convention of notation in many styles of jazz, but usually doesn't apply to jazz before the early 1930s,
latin jazz,
bebop, or to the work of composers writing in the 1950s or later, unless "swing" is specified in the score. Notes that are not swung are called
straight notes.
When swung eighth notes are performed, many performers slightly accent the "+" or second eighth note of each pair. In modern jazz, where nearly even eighths has become common they still slightly accent every second eighth note of each pair to achieve a hint of swing. Latin musicians play straight eighths and will say they're "swinging" when they slightly accent the second eighth note of every even pair.
Swing rhythms are sometimes indicated by an indication that pairs of eighth notes should be treated as a quarter and an eighth in a triplet bracket. However, swing rhythms range anywhere from slightly asymmetrical pairs to imbalances of a more pronounced sort (due to the mathematical nature of dividing one beat into 3 equal beats).
The subtler end of the range involves treating written pairs of
eighth notes as slightly asymmetrical pairs of similar values. On the other end of the spectrum, the "
dotted eighth - one sixteenth" rhythm, consists of a long note three times as long as the short. Prevalent "dotted rhythms" such as these in the
rhythm section of dance bands in the mid 20th century are more accurately described as a "shuffle"; they're also an important feature of
baroque dance and many other styles. Rhythms identified as swung notes most commonly fall somewhere between straight eighths and a quarter-eighth triplet pattern.
The following points of reference are reliable only as approximations of musical practice:
- 1:1 = eighth note + eighth note, "straight eighths."
- 3:2 = long eighth + short eighth, "swing" or "shuffle"
- 2:1 = triplet quarter note + triplet eighth, triple meter; "medium swing" or "medium shuffle"
- 3:1 = dotted eighth note + sixteenth note; "hard swing", or "hard shuffle"
Swing ratios tend to get get wider at slower tempos and narrower at faster tempos.
Miles Davis varied his swing ratios, frequently delaying the first note of each pair of eighth notes by some milliseconds and then synchronized the second eighth note with the drummer's swing eighths being played on the cymbal. Advanced performers often "lay back" or play "behind the beat" when performing jazz melodies by delaying the rhythms by milliseconds.
Quarter notes can sound swung when they're played slightly behind the beat, detached, and accented on the two and four. Or late on one and three, but closer to the beat on two and four. Phrases swing when they begin between the beats. similar to how straight eighths can swing when they're behind the beat which creates an asymmetrical cross rhythm.
Rhythm
In
jazz, this interpretive device is assumed in most written music other than
dixieland,
latin jazz,
jazz-funk (
soul-jazz) and
jazz-fusion and
bebop, but may also be indicated. For example, "
Satin Doll", a
swing era jazz standard is normally interpreted with a pronounced swing rhythm. It was published written in 4/4 time, but at least some versions also note
medium swing.
In
dance music,
swing rhythm generally refers to the
meter of the music, rather than to this convention of notation, so any music played with the "near-triplet" timing (see above) and swing accent will be referred to as
swing rhythm however they're written.
Styles
Swing is commonly used in
blues,
country,
jazz,
1930s-1940s swing jazz, and often in many other styles. Except for very fast jazz, slow ballads,
latin jazz, and jazz-rock
fusion, much written music in jazz is assumed to be performed with a swing rhythm. In some cases, publishers specify that the music is to be performed "with a swing". In
jazz and
big band music, a shuffle is almost always accompanied by a distinctive "cooking" rhythm played on the
ride cymbal or
hi hat.
Styles that always use traditional (triplet) rhythms, resembling "hard swing," include
foxtrot,
quickstep and some other
ballroom dances,
Stride piano, and 1920s-era
Novelty piano (the successor to Ragtime style).
Styles that sometimes use swing rhythms include:
Early rock and roll such as Bill Haley's "Shake, Rattle and Roll" and "Rock Around the Clock", Buddy Holly's "That'll Be The Day", and Elvis Presley's "Jailhouse Rock".
Country and western
Blues, especially 1930 Swing jazz-infused Jump blues
Ragtime
Big band jazz
Some types of modern rock, particularly punk rock, pop-punk, and alternative rock. Recent examples include "Holiday" by Green Day and "Tarantula" by Smashing Pumpkins
Transcription
In the swing era, swing meant accented triplets (shuffle rhythm), suitable for dancing. With the development of bebop and later jazz styles independent of dancing, the term was used for far more general timings. There is much debate over use of other ratios than 2:1 in swing rhythms.
Some publishers of jazz music, especially those whose intended audience is people unfamiliar with jazz styles, transcribe the swing either:
As compound time, such as 6/8, 9/8, or 12/8. When played with the swing accent, these time signatures may be grouped together and called swing time, or swing time can also mean a simple time played with the swing convention.
As triplets within a duple meter.
In general, where music with a swing meter is required, musicians in the jazz tradition will prefer to read music written in common time and played with a swing, while musicians in the classical tradition will prefer to read music written in compound time and played as written.
Further Information
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